Product Code Database
Example Keywords: winter -tetris $3
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: District Officer
Tag Wiki 'District Officer'.
Tag

The District Officer (abbreviated to D.O.), was a commissioned officer of one of the colonial governments of the , from the mid-1930s also a member of the of the , who was responsible for a District of one of the overseas territories of the Empire.


Role
The district officer was an administrator and often also a and was the link between the professional and technical services of the colonial government and the people of his district. He was at the heart of colonial administration throughout most of the British Empire, although not in , where the same functions were carried out by members of the Indian Civil Service, nor in the self-governing .Anthony Kirk-Greene, On Crown Service: A History of HM Colonial and Overseas Civil Services, 1837-1997 (London: I. B. Tauris & Co., 1999)Anthony Kirk-Greene, Symbol of Authority: The British District Officer in Africa (London: I. B. Tauris & Co.), Outline at ibtauris.com, accessed 27 July 2016

District Officers wore uniforms, according to the climate, but their formal tunic with gold braid was usually reserved for ceremonial occasions.

Until the 1930s, each overseas possession had its own administrative service, and prospective District Officers needed to apply to one or more of them. Once in post, an officer wishing to transfer to another colony or British protectorate had to make a new application to its government. However, in the 1930s a unified Colonial Service was created, with a number of sub-services, and each of its officers was a member of the civil service of a particular territory and also of one of the sub-services of the Colonial Service managed by the , based in .


Career progression
Before being appointed, a candidate was first a District Officer Cadet, undergoing a rigorous training, and was then promoted to Assistant District Officer, usually after two years of successful probation and after passing examinations.E. K. Lumley, Forgotten Mandate: A British District Officer in Tanganyika (C. Hurst & Co, 1976), p. 10 On being appointed as a District Officer, he took on the administration of a District, usually in the territory of the Empire where he was.

Because of the number of districts, many District Officers remained in the same role until leaving the Colonial Service. If they were promoted, they became first District Commissioners, then Provincial Commissioners. Some rose to the pinnacle of being colonial Governors, although men were also appointed as Governors whose previous careers had been in other services. In particular, the Governors of , , , and were almost invariably senior or officers.


Notable District Officers
  • Sir Reginald Fleming Johnston (1874-1938) a District of Weihaiwei, later a tutor to the former Emperor
  • (1921–1993), a New Zealander who was a District Officer in the Solomon Islands and later Governor of the Seychelles
  • (1869–1957), a District Officer of the North Borneo Chartered Company, later a Conservative member of parliament
  • William R. Bell (1876–1927), Australian-born District Officer of in the British Solomon Islands
  • (1901–1982), a District Officer in Malaya
  • (1925–2013), a District Officer and District Commissioner in North Borneo, later Director-General of the National Trust
  • Anastasios Christodoulou (1932–2002), a District Officer in Tanganyika, later Secretary General of the Association of Commonwealth Universities
  • (1888–1952), a District Officer in , later a writer
  • Sir Douglas Hall, 14th Baronet (1909–2004), a District Officer in Africa, later Governor of British Somaliland
  • Edwin Richard Hallifax (1874–1950), a District Officer in Hong Kong, later acting Colonial Secretary
  • (1932–2015), a District Officer in Kenya, later Governor of the British Virgin Islands
  • (1916–1998), a District Officer in the Western Pacific, later a Conservative member of parliament
  • Gwilliam Iwan Jones (1904–1995), a District Officer in Bende,
  • Sir Donald Luddington (1920–2009), a District Officer in Hong Kong, later High Commissioner for the Western Pacific and Governor of the Solomon Islands
  • (1909–1998), a District Officer in Nigeria, later Cabinet Secretary
  • Sir James Pollock (1883–1982), a District Officer in , later District Commissioner for and Northern Ireland Senator
  • (1896–1965), a District Officer on , later an academic
  • Tunku Abdul Rahman (1903–1990), a District Officer of , later Prime Minister of Malaya and of Malaysia
  • (1912–2010), a District Officer in , becoming the first African to be appointed in the Colonial Service, later Nigerian Minister of Finance
  • , a District Officer in Hong Kong, later the Chief Executive of Hong Kong
  • Harry Graham Willis (1875-1943), a District Officer, later Provincial Commissioner, in
  • (1912–1963), a District Officer and later Resident in North Borneo


See also
  • Sanders of the River (a film of 1935 about a District Commissioner in Nigeria)
  • The Scarlet Spear (a film of 1954 about a District Officer in Africa)
  • (a film of 1956 about a District Officer Cadet in Oceania)


Further reading
  • John Morley, Colonial Postscript: The Diary of a District Officer 1935–56 (London: Radcliffe Press, 1992)
  • , Sanders of the River (1911)
  • K. G. Bradley, The Diary of a District Officer (1943)
  • , A Pattern of Islands (1952)


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time